Fr. 63.00

Beautiful Security - Leading Security Experts Explain How They Think

Englisch · Taschenbuch

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Beschreibung

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Although most people don't give security much attention until their personal or business systems are attacked, this thought-provoking anthology demonstrates that digital security is not only worth thinking about, it's also a fascinating topic. Criminals succeed by exercising enormous creativity, and those defending against them must do the same.

Beautiful Security explores this challenging subject with insightful essays and analysis on topics that include:

  • The underground economy for personal information: how it works, the relationships among criminals, and some of the new ways they pounce on their prey
  • How social networking, cloud computing, and other popular trends help or hurt our online security
  • How metrics, requirements gathering, design, and law can take security to a higher level
  • The real, little-publicized history of PGP
This book includes contributions from:
  • Peiter "Mudge" Zatko
  • Jim Stickley
  • Elizabeth Nichols
  • Chenxi Wang
  • Ed Bellis
  • Ben Edelman
  • Phil Zimmermann and Jon Callas
  • Kathy Wang
  • Mark Curphey
  • John McManus
  • James Routh
  • Randy V. Sabett
  • Anton Chuvakin
  • Grant Geyer and Brian Dunphy
  • Peter Wayner
  • Michael Wood and Fernando Francisco
All royalties will be donated to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).

Inhaltsverzeichnis










Preface;
Why Security Is Beautiful;
Audience for This Book;
Donation;
Organization of the Material;
Conventions Used in This Book;
Using Code Examples;
Safari® Books Online;
How to Contact Us;
Chapter 1: Psychological Security Traps;
1.1 Learned Helplessness and Naïveté;
1.2 Confirmation Traps;
1.3 Functional Fixation;
1.4 Summary;
Chapter 2: Wireless Networking: Fertile Ground for Social Engineering;
2.1 Easy Money;
2.2 Wireless Gone Wild;
2.3 Still, Wireless Is the Future;
Chapter 3: Beautiful Security Metrics;
3.1 Security Metrics by Analogy: Health;
3.2 Security Metrics by Example;
3.3 Summary;
Chapter 4: The Underground Economy of Security Breaches;
4.1 The Makeup and Infrastructure of the Cyber Underground;
4.2 The Payoff;
4.3 How Can We Combat This Growing Underground Economy?;
4.4 Summary;
Chapter 5: Beautiful Trade: Rethinking E-Commerce Security;
5.1 Deconstructing Commerce;
5.2 Weak Amelioration Attempts;
5.3 E-Commerce Redone: A New Security Model;
5.4 The New Model;
Chapter 6: Securing Online Advertising: Rustlers and Sheriffs in the New Wild West;
6.1 Attacks on Users;
6.2 Advertisers As Victims;
6.3 Creating Accountability in Online Advertising;
Chapter 7: The Evolution of PGP's Web of Trust;
7.1 PGP and OpenPGP;
7.2 Trust, Validity, and Authority;
7.3 PGP and Crypto History;
7.4 Enhancements to the Original Web of Trust Model;
7.5 Interesting Areas for Further Research;
7.6 References;
Chapter 8: Open Source Honeyclient: Proactive Detection of Client-Side Exploits;
8.1 Enter Honeyclients;
8.2 Introducing the World's First Open Source Honeyclient;
8.3 Second-Generation Honeyclients;
8.4 Honeyclient Operational Results;
8.5 Analysis of Exploits;
8.6 Limitations of the Current Honeyclient Implementation;
8.7 Related Work;
8.8 The Future of Honeyclients;
Chapter 9: Tomorrow's Security Cogs and Levers;
9.1 Cloud Computing and Web Services: The Single Machine Is Here;
9.2 Connecting People, Process, and Technology: The Potential for Business Process Management;
9.3 Social Networking: When People Start Communicating, Big Things Change;
9.4 Information Security Economics: Supercrunching and the New Rules of the Grid;
9.5 Platforms of the Long-Tail Variety: Why the Future Will Be Different for Us All;
9.6 Conclusion;
9.7 Acknowledgments;
Chapter 10: Security by Design;
10.1 Metrics with No Meaning;
10.2 Time to Market or Time to Quality?;
10.3 How a Disciplined System Development Lifecycle Can Help;
10.4 Conclusion: Beautiful Security Is an Attribute of Beautiful Systems;
Chapter 11: Forcing Firms to Focus: Is Secure Software in Your Future?;
11.1 Implicit Requirements Can Still Be Powerful;
11.2 How One Firm Came to Demand Secure Software;
11.3 Enforcing Security in Off-the-Shelf Software;
11.4 Analysis: How to Make the World's Software More Secure;
Chapter 12: Oh No, Here Come the Infosecurity Lawyers!;
12.1 Culture;
12.2 Balance;
12.3 Communication;
12.4 Doing the Right Thing;
Chapter 13: Beautiful Log Handling;
13.1 Logs in Security Laws and Standards;
13.2 Focus on Logs;
13.3 When Logs Are Invaluable;
13.4 Challenges with Logs;
13.5 Case Study: Behind a Trashed Server;
13.6 Future Logging;
13.7 Conclusions;
Chapter 14: Incident Detection: Finding the Other 68%;
14.1 A Common Starting Point;
14.2 Improving Detection with Context;
14.3 Improving Perspective with Host Logging;
14.4 Summary;
Chapter 15: Doing Real Work Without Real Data;
15.1 How Data Translucency Works;
15.2 A Real-Life Example;
15.3 Personal Data Stored As a Convenience;
15.4 Trade-offs;
15.5 Going Deeper;
15.6 References;
Chapter 16: Casting Spells: PC Security Theater;
16.1 Growing Attacks, Defenses in Retreat;
16.2 The Illusion Revealed;
16.3 Better Practices for Desktop Security;
16.4 Conclusion;
Contributors;
Colophon;

Über den Autor / die Autorin










Andy Oram is an editor at O'Reilly Media, a highly respected book publisher and technology information provider. An employee of the company since 1992, Andy currently specializes in free software and open source technologies. His work for O'Reilly includes the first books ever published commercially in the United States on Linux, and the 2001 title Peer-to-Peer. His modest programming and system administration skills are mostly self-taught.
John is CTO of the SaaS Business Unit at McAfee, his second stint at McAfee. Previously, he was their Chief Security Architect, after which he founded and served as CEO of Stonewall Software, which focused on making anti-virus technology faster, better and cheaper. John was also the founder of Secure Software (now part of Fortify).

John is author of many security books, including Building Secure Software (Addison-Wesley), Network Security with OpenSSL (O'Reilly), and the forthcoming Myths of Security (O'Reilly). He is responsible for numerous software security tools and is the original author of Mailman, the GNU mailing list manager. He has done extensive standards work in the IEEE and IETF and co-invented GCM, a cryptographic algorithm that NIST has standardized. John is also an active advisor to several security companies, including Fortify and Bit9. He holds a MS and BA from the University of Virginia.


Produktdetails

Autoren Andy Oram, John Viega
Verlag Lulu Press
 
Sprache Englisch
Produktform Taschenbuch
Erschienen 02.06.2009
 
EAN 0636920527480
ISBN 978-0-596-52748-8
Seiten 300
Abmessung 179 mm x 233 mm x 22 mm
Gewicht 554 g
Thema Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik > Informatik, EDV > Informatik

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